230 likes | 324 Views
Moving Towards A Low-Carbon Economy: UK Lessons NICVA masterclass on the low-carbon economy Belfast 23 November 2012. Sam Fankhauser Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change London School of Economics Support by the UK Economic and Social Research Council and
E N D
Moving Towards A Low-Carbon Economy: UK LessonsNICVA masterclass on the low-carbon economyBelfast 23 November 2012 Sam Fankhauser Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change London School of Economics Support by the UK Economic and Social Research Council and the Grantham Foundation is gratefully acknowledged
Overview • The legal context • Decarbonisation sector by sector • A policy framework • Opportunities and concerns
The UK’s statutory 5-year carbon budgets Cutting emissions in half by 2025 (relative to 1990) PS: Current emissions pa Source: Committee on Climate Change (2012)
How are we doing? Emissions are down, mostly due to economic factors emissions in traded sector emissions in not-traded sector • First carbon budget (2008-12) will be met • Recommendation not to “bank” possible over-performance • Step change is needed to meet future budgets Source: CCC (2012)
Indicative emissions trajectories Different sectors will have different emission reduction paths Source: Committee on Climate Change (2010)
Emissions by UK country N Ireland has higher agricultural emissions, lower energy emissions
Overview • The legal context • Decarbonisation sector by sector • A policy framework • Opportunities and concerns
Electric power emissions Electricity generation needs to be all but carbon-free in 20 years Source: Committee on Climate Change (2010)
How are we doing? Renewables broadly on track, nuclear and CCS probably behind • Healthy renewables pipeline (11GW), but planning bottlenecks persist • Some very recent movements on CCS and nuclear • Policy uncertainty related to new energy bill and interest in shale gas Source: CCC (2012)
Emissions from buildings Push in energy efficiency and gradual introduction of renewable heat
How are we doing? Some progress, but more effort needed to unlock “difficult” options Cavity wall insulation Renewable heat • Cavity wall and loft insulation on track but solid walls well behind • Renewable heat only now taking off based on new policies • Weather factors (warm/cold winters) affect annual emissions picture Source: CCC (2012)
Transport emissions Technological change dominates demand management Source: Committee on Climate Change (2010)
How are we doing? Carbon efficiency of new cars is improving rapidly Carbon intensity over time Carbon intensity by car segment (2011) • Better fuel efficiency overall and switch to best-in-class • Slow uptake of electric (hybrid or battery) cars, but new models are brought to market • Limited success of behavioural measures (eco-driving, speed limits) Source: CCC (2012)
Overview • The legal context • Decarbonisation sector by sector • A policy framework • Opportunities and concerns
The key elements of climate policy Put a price on carbon Address climate change externality Support low-carbon technology Address market failures related to RDD&D Remove barriers to energy efficiency Address market and behaviour issues related to energy use Source: Stern 2007
A complex landscape: price measures • Cap and trade schemes • EU Emissions Trading Scheme • Carbon taxes • Climate Change Levy (diluted through Climate Change Agreements) • Renewable energy incentives • Renewable obligation / Contract for Difference (large scale) • Feed-in tariff (up to 5MW) • Renewable heat incentive • “Accidental” price measures • Fuel duty: primary purpose is fiscal • Landfill tax: primary duty is waste management
A complex landscape: non-price measures • Supplier obligations • Carbon Emission Reduction Target (CERT) • Financial assistance • “Green Deal” (for building efficiency) • Green Investment Bank (for large investments) • Information and technical assistance • Carbon Trust, Energy Savings Trust • Reputation and management incentives • CRC Energy Efficiency Scheme
NI Policy levers Devolved policy Reserved policy
Overview • The legal context • Decarbonisation sector by sector • A policy framework • Opportunities and concerns
Concern: Competitiveness Limited to a few industries, but are there better tools than free permits? Source: CCC (2008)
Concern: Impact on fuel poverty Energy efficiency could offset the effect of higher energy prices Targeted energy efficiency Income support (e.g. winter fuel payments) Tariff structure (e.g. block tariffs)
Opportunity: Job creation? Quality of jobs (productivity) is more important than quantity Salaries in carbon trading (2008) Labour intensity of energy Solar PV Wind Biomass Coal Gas 7.4 – 10.6 0.7 – 2.8 0.8 – 2.9 1.0 1.0 1.0 • 2 3 4 • Jobs per MW Sources: Carbon Salary Survey 2009; Kammen et al (2006)
Moving Towards A Low-Carbon Economy: UK LessonsNICVA masterclass on the low-carbon economyBelfast 23 November 2012 Sam Fankhauser Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change London School of Economics Support by the UK Economic and Social Research Council and the Grantham Foundation is gratefully acknowledged